The Malta Independent 19 May 2024, Sunday
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Land use

Alfred Sant Thursday, 20 August 2015, 18:24 Last update: about 10 years ago

Land in Malta is the scarcest and most valuable resource. Clear limitations should exist regarding what percentage of land available is to be allocated to developent. With time, the demand for available land to be used one way or the other was bound to increase  – and it did. Ditto the price of land. Pressures grew for a more intensive use of it.

Still, even while everybody accepted that land is our most precious asset, or perhaps for that reaosn, irrational decisions – there’s no better adjective to describe them – continued to be taken.

In the Maltese context, it should have been clear that high rise buildings make sense.

However, instead of placing them at the centre of urban concentrations, from where the height of succeeding blocs would decline till the lowest were located closest to the coastline, we did the opposite. The highest buildings were erected at the water’s edge.

So we saw projects like the one at Tigne come on line, with ugliness as their distinctive feature.

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Theft

I still feel uncomfortable with the campaigns launched by the powers that be against those who abuse social benefits.

They are mostly targeting members of disadvantaged families, who lack totally or almost “cultural” capital. (Meaning that they do not know how to improve their standards of living because they have been brought up in conditions of deprivation and penury.) They concentrate on scrounging off social benefits (unemployment, sickness, whatever)  because that’s the life they know.

This is wrong and has to be brought under control – with prudence however and care.  

For there are other people who have no lack of “cultural” capital and who are also quite adept at manipulating our social and fiscal systems to their benefit, while remaining outside the spotlight. As usual in this context, one mentions the professionals and the firms that have understood how to operate in the black economy, without paying VAT or having to declare thier income in full. To update the picture, I was recently told about glaring abuses in the implementation of parental leave – a system that is much needed but which is already being abused.

No matter who’s responsible for it – theft remains theft.

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Accountability

There’s nothing new in the ongoing discussion, if one can call it that, about accountability, abuse of power and corruption. Since I first got involved in political work, towards the end of the seventies of the previous century, it’s been a never ending story.

The problem was and is how to establish the institutions that can really safeguard us from these malpractices. When one starts pushing for the implementation of radical measures that could truly clamp down on the ongoing shady games, reservations and objections soon arise from all points of the compass.

What I found most curious over the years, was the reaction to a proposal that for crimes such as those listed, tough penalties should be implemented without exception, no matter when the facts took place. Whoever pushes for such a measure is soon subjected to a whispering campaign that labels him or her a vindictive bastard

In a small society like ours, few care to be considered as vindictive bastards.

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